(JWR) --- (http://www.jewishworldreview.com) IN THE MOVIE "L.A. CONFIDENTIAL," a young detective is asked why he became
a cop. He reveals that his father was killed in the line of duty by a thief
who was never caught. The son made up a name for his father's murderer,
"Rollo Tomasi," to make him more real.

He joined the force to get the guy who gets away with it.

Rollo Tomasi goes through life breaking oaths, breaking the law and
generally violating the norms of decency. Bill Clinton is Rollo Tomasi.

Revelations that would ruin a lesser mortal cause his ratings to rise.

Clinton's career as an escape artist began in 1969, when he lied, cajoled
and enlisted the powerful to avoid the draft in a war where more than 58,000
of his contemporaries died.

Few seem care that the leader who now sends airmen in harm's way over the
skies of Iraq himself refused to serve his country.

Clinton also evaded responsibility for Whitewater -- a legendary scam
involving fraudulent SBA loans, the looting of a savings and loan that
ultimately cost taxpayers $57 million, a Clinton-appointed regulator keeping
a financial institution open long after its insolvency was known and fat
legal fees paid to St. Hillary.

The president has been implicated in criminal activity related to
Whitewater and Madison Guarantee by both David Hale and the late James
McDougal.

Four of his close associates, including former Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy
Tucker, have gone to jail for Whitewater offenses. Susan McDougal spent 14
months behind bars for refusing to testify about Clinton's involvement. The
president has yet to be brought to justice.

Gary Hart's 1988 presidential campaign foundered after a short sail on The Monkey Business.

Clinton's Arkansas years were filled
with hundreds of affairs -- women procured by his security detail, one-night
stands, oral sex in parked cars, "residuals" passed out like party favors
and state funds used for amorous pursuits.

Not all of the "ripe peaches" consented to be plucked. Kathleen Willey
charges the president assaulted her. Paula Jones was paid $850,000 to end a
sexual harassment suit the Clintonistas insisted was totally without merit.
To keep this laundry off the line, Clinton and his operatives have smeared,
intimidated and shoveled dirt by the metric ton.

When Jones' case was pending, the president's lawyer announced he would put
the lady's character on trial. Absent DNA evidence, the White House would
still be claiming that Monica Lewinsky was a stalker.

News of an affair Henry Hyde had sometime in the late Middle Ages was
shopped to ABC News by a White House employee before it appeared on the
first family's favorite Internet magazine.

Bob Livingston's private life was publicized by a pornographer who brags of
his investigators' White House contacts.

Like his lechery, Clinton's m.o. as a smear artist was established in
Arkansas. Trooper Larry Patterson says that, as governor, Clinton "was
always asking us to research his opponents. If he had a source, he'd ask us
to drop a dime on them."

When the president decries the "politics of personal destruction," the
angels must weep.

The president says he never "changed government policy solely because of a
contribution." Note the qualifier.

Yet millions in campaign funds flowed to Clinton and the Democrats from
individuals with ties to communist China. John Huang (who went from a vice
presidency with the Lippo Group -- a conglomerate in partnership with
Beijing -- to a Commerce Department job and a top-secret security clearance)
raised $6 million for the party of perjury.

In return, the president pushed for permanent Most Favored Nation trade
status for the folks he used to call the "butchers of Beijing," personally
lobbied Long Beach, Calif., officials to approve the lease of a vacant naval
base to a mainland Chinese shipping company and retroactively approved the
transfer of missile technology to a nation we could be at war with in the
next century.

The Rosenbergs were small fry by comparison.

Now, after impeachment by the House, some senators want to cut a deal for
Clinton. Following a pro-forma trial, they want to let him off the hook with
the wet-noodle slap of censure.

Will Rollo Tomasi -- the guy who gets away
with it -- get away with it again?

12/28/98: Zionist dream alive and well on West Bank12/18/98: Impeach or abandon the Rule of Law12/16/98: Clinton moves Middle East closer to war12/14/98: Why we lost interest in the homeless12/10/98: No place at table for conservatives12/07/98: The day America lost its innocence12/02/98: Pilgrims Pilloried in streets of Plymouth11/30/98: Caribbean dogpatch not a good candidate for statehood11/25/98: Will Vermont force gay marriage on the nation? 11/23/98: The ACLU wants your kids to get a love life11/18/98: Why liberals hate tobacco and guns more than drugs and crime 11/16/98: "Pleasantville" a countercultural morality play 11/13/98: Ads are a tough sell for abortion11/09/98: Why gutless Republicans lost11/06/98: Historians against the Constitution11/02/98: Loving response to a hateful conference10/28/98: Professor Death will fit right in at Princeton10/26/98: Plymouth caves to Pilgrim foes10/21/98: On '98 election, keep a critical eye on polls 10/19/98: Clinton could yet be 'prosperity president'10/16/98: Working families -- Dems love 'em (stuffed)10/09/98: Majoring in 'weirdness'10/07/98: Friends of Billy Clinton9/29/98: Letter from ex-soldier highlights defense peril9/28/98: Answering arguments against impeachment9/18/98: The nation that doesn't exist9/14/98: Bubba isn't the only one who should be ashamed9/11/98: Resolution of Clinton crisis will define national character9/09/98: We're still just wild about Harry9/07/98: Mexican banditry didn't end with Pancho Villa9/02/98: Clinton forgives us!8/31/98: Ashcroft's plain talking touches responsive chord8/26/98: Public opinion be damned8/24/98: Why liberals condone Clinton's lies8/20/98: Time to move on -- to impeachment8/12/98: With Bubba in the sexual privacy zone8/10/98: The truth won't set Clinton free8/06/98: Truth about Hiroshima is incontrovertible8/04/98: Clinton not the first hollow president7/30/98: "Small Soldiers" -- a fractured Vietnam allegory7/27/98: Crime wave hits hometown7/22/98: Love in an Internet fishbowl7/20/98: Ads bring ex-gay movement out of closet7/15/98: Brian and Amy -- the children of Roe7/13/98: Why are we scared of obnoxious 'activists?'
7/6/98: Fonda still resists reality7/1/98: New York blesses domestic partnerships6/29/98: Teddy and Calvin stood for virtue6/24/98: Will Clinton betray Taiwan?6/22/98: Big tobacco? What about big casinos?6/15/98: Religion -- God for what ails you
6/10/98: Planning Clinton's China itinery6/8/98: Republicans' Custer offers advice
6/4/98: Oh, Dems Christian-bashers!
6/2/98: Goldwater did conservatives more harm than good 5/27/98: A Clinton-hater confesses 5/15/98: Giuliani's assault on marriage5/13/98: Hillary knows what's best for everyone
5/11/98: To honor her would not be honorable5/6/98: Conservative chasm: pragmatism vs. worship of marketplace5/4/98: Anglo-saxon me
4/29/98:
Needle exchange programs are assisted-suicide
4/27/98: Chretien's mission of mercy to Fidel 4/22/98: School-choice is a religious freedom issue4/20/98: Corporate execs deliver body parts to Beijing4/14/98: National sales tax --- looks better all the time
4/13/98: The U.N. sinister? Hey, where did that idea come from?
4/8/98: Unions fight workers rights in 226 campaign3/30/98: Africa's leaders should apologize3/25/98: GOP shouldn't look to media for advice3/22/98: You should care about Clinton's 'private life'3/19/98: Color-coded reading, product of obsessive minds3/16/98: Amendment will end exile of G-d from our public lives3/9/98: Havana will break your heart3/2/98: Vouchers Terrify Teachers' Union2/25/98: Presidential politics starts at a resort hotel2/23/98: Hillary's support comes at a price2/18/98: How many times must we say "no" to gay rights?2/16/98: Enoch Powell spoke the truth on immigration2/11/98: Bubba behaving badly2/9/98: A conservative dissent on the flag-burning amendment2/5/98: We get the leaders we deserve2/2/98: Send a signal that could penetrate boardroom doors1/27/98: State of the president: hollow rhetoric1/25/98: For Monica's playmate, we have no one to blame but ourselves1/22/98: At Yale, bet on yarmulke over gown1/19/98: Commission tackles America's fastest-growing addiction, gambling
1/15/98: Capital punishment and the hard case: no exceptions for Karla Faye Tucker
1/12/98: Partial-birth abortion and the GOP's future: the "big tent" meets truth in advertising
1/8/98: IOLTA: the Left's latest scam to crawl into our pockets
1/5/98: Connect the dots to create a terrorist state1/1/98: The Unacceptables of 1997: Long may they rave12/28/97: Hypocrisy is a liberal survival mechanism12/23/97: Chanukah is no laughing matter12/22/97: No merry Christmas for persecuted Christians around the world12/18/97: Bosnia, Haiti, and how not to conduct a foreign policy